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The Devoe 2-Coat Paint System doas better job &y ~ and with 5 N n”“Nc.alO GOODYEAR TIRES rowar SURPRISE PRICES SEE PAGE C-4 Orchestra Reservations NA. 0069 3135 K ST. LIBERTY NATIONAL BANK (Acéounting Department) 15th & Eye Sts. N.W. 1S NOW CUSHIONED FOR SOUND Employes have expressed apprecia- tion of ‘the difference Griffith- Consumers acoustical treatment has mede in their ‘work, for easier has lessened the pos- ccuracies , . . (@ FriTh-(OnsuMErs : (@mrany 1413 New York Avenue N.W. MEtropolitan 4849 ForLasting Peace Experts in International Law Envision New Post-War Moves Experts in international law today combed through mistakes of past efforts to insure lasting world peace and envisioned new attempts af! the war is ended. ~ Most agreed that efforts toward permanent peace would be futile without active support of the United States. Prof. J. Eugene Harley of the University of Southern California told the 34th annual meeting of the American Society of International Law at the Carlton Hotel that “a single world-wide approach” is de- sirable. Regional attempts, such as now are in effect in the Western Hemisphere, “unless in turn linked into a world federal arrangement of some kind, might create a new system of balance of power * * * with regions as the parties rather than single states,” he said. Hull Statement Cited. “This world point of view is sug- gested further when attention is focused upon statements like that of Secretary of State Hull to the effect that a war in any part of the world engages the interests of the people of the United States,” he declared last night. Future international organizations for peace “must take care of the legitimate economic needs of all na- tions,” he added. “It must recog- nize once for all that it is too much to expect people anywhere to be sweet-spirited and peace-minded on empty stomachs and without jobs.” Without the United States it is doubtful the League of Nations could again function to prevent war, H. Duncan Hall, formerly of the League secretariat and now vis- iting professor at Harvard, said. Places Responsibility. “Positive aggression was encour- aged and brought to the surface by the abdication of the great powers from their responsibilities in the matter of preserving order,” he added, listing the United States, the British Commonwealta and France as those responsible. “If totalitarianism, which has re- Jected the whole basis on which these procedures have been built and reverted to primitive tribalism, wins in Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia, diplomatic procedures for pacific settlement will have disap- peared except for the enfeebled rump left in the sphere of the inter- relations of the American people.” Prof. Percy E. Corbett of McGill University, Montreal, declared that “we may gain dignity and efficacy for the law of nations by insisting on the reality and growth of a uni- versal community which is slowly excreting a law governing even that unruly creature, the nation-state bemused by & myth of sovereignty.” D. C. Accepts Addition To Kingsman School One more of the District’s com- pleted P. W. A. projects was ac- cepted today by & group of District Government engineers, headed by Capt. John L. Person, subject to final action by the Commissioners. It was the 8-room addition to the Kingsman School, Fourteenth and E streets NE., erected at a cost of $179,000 by the J. L. Robinson Con- struction Co. of 'Baltimore from plans drawn by Upman & Adams; Washington architects. ; . - 1107 “F” STREET { {Btorms Throughent NEW YORK, NEW. JERSEY, PENNSYLVANIA; OHIO, ILLI WED 50 YEARS—MTr. and Mrs, Emil Levy, 4514 Connecticut avenue N.W. who celebrated their golden wedding anniver- sary May 8. Mr. Levy, 78, and Mrs. Levy, 76, have two chil- dren and four grandchildren. —Harris-Ewing Photo. Boyd T}iplets to Appear On Radio Program ‘The Misses Mildred, Edith and Elena Boyd, triplet daughters of the Panamanian Ambassador, Senor Dr. Don Jorge E. Boyd, will go to New York Monday with their par- ents to appear on the “We, the People” radio program Tuesday. The New York trip will also in- clude a visit to the World's Fair, where the Ambassador will head the Panamanian delegation during the observance of Pan-American Day. Besides singing on the radio pro- gram, the Boyd triplets also plan to appear on & program at the Starlight Roof Garden of the Wal- dorf Hotel, where they will stay while in New York. Colored Symphony Coming ‘The National Colored Choral Sym- phony of Baltimore will present a concert at the First Congregational Church, '10th and G streets N.W., Friday under the joint auspices of the First Ci tional Church and the Renovation and Organ Committee of the People’s Congre- gational Church. Tiquid-Codled Engine Is Tested by Navy in New Fighter Plane Counterpart of Army's ‘Aircuda’ Delivered For Flight Trials Departing from a policy which for many years has resulted in all Navy airplanes being powered with air-cooled engines, the Navy De- D. Held Too One-Sided Under New Deal Castle Charges Roosevelt Administration ‘Perverts’ Traditional U. S. Stand William R. Castle, Undersecretary of State in the Hoover administration, accused the New Deal last night of partment has purchased for experi- | “pe: mental purposes a single-seater Bell fighter which is & counterpart of the new Army “Aircuda.” Constructed by the Bell Aircraft Corp., Buffalo, N. Y., the plane has just been delivered for preliminary flight tests there, after which it is to be flown to the Anacostia Naval Air Station here for testing by the Navy flight test section. Designated as the XFL-1, the new fighter is an all-metal, low-wing monoplane powered with an Allison 12-cylinder, liquid-coaled = engine mounted behind the.pilot and driv- ing a three-bladed propeller by means of & long shaft passing be- tween the pilot's legs. Although its performance charac- teristics are naval secrets, it is be- lieved that the new fighter, because of special equipment for ship-board h:ndtn;: h:nd"t.l.n-om, is somewhat slower than the similar Army type, which has been credited with ufi’i flight speed of approximately 400 miles per hour. It is the Army “Alrcuda” type which is being de- livered to the allies, after the Army Air Corps had waived deliveries in favor of Great Britain and France on the basis that an improved and even faster type will be made avail- able for our use. ‘The Navy fighter is,to be armed with .50-caliber machine guns and & 37-millimeter cannon firing & 1%-inch shell. be:ln the basis of American foreign Ppolicy. “At a period of history when rapid communications have made us all neighbors, the New Deal has re- stricted this policy to the Western Hemisphere,” he said in an address prepared for the Foreign Policy As- sociation. “In addition, it has made it a Plan Your Family's Sécurity for the years ahead! FARM BUREAU LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Serves City and Rural People In 1935, with savings obtained from ownership and operation of the Farm Bureau Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, the policy- owners purchased the controlling interest in a legal reserve Life Insurance Company. 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Administrative and acquisition expenses are' distributed over the two companies and the insurance protection at lower cost. policyholder is therefore assured of 1t is the constant purpose and obligation of the management to see that you, the policyholder, receive maximum benefits and services from your Farm Bureau insurance policies. . l}efora you insure, get in touch with a Farm Bureau insurance service man, who will give you complete information. All Farm Bu- reau insurance services are available to both city and rural residents. Farm Bureau Insurance Companies are affiliated with the District of Columbia Co-operative League L. A. HALBERT, Dist. Manager 1430 PARK ROAD N.W., WASHINGTON, D. C: COLUMBIA 8065 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA AGENTS RICHARD H. BREADY DL 3250 MARGARET A. GERBER 1901 E St. NW. RE 1078 J JOHN 8. HOFFECKER 6520 2nd St. NW. , RA. 1722 HERMAN F. KARASEK 1812 You St, 8.E. LI. 7098-M 832 17th N.W. J. TRACEY FENBY 1430 Park Rd. N.W. CO. 8065 'LAWRENCE HILL 916 17th 8t. NW. RE. 4843 WALTER KRIMONT 2110 Virginia Ave, ME. 8255 MOSES 228 7th St. SE. AT. 8419 MRS, BTSSIE H. MICHELSEN 1746 Hobart N.W. AD. 5283 JOHN J. MURRAY, Apt. 210 2401 Calvert NW. CO. 4741 SIMON M. NEWMAN 38 Flower Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. 8H. 4679-M C. 1512 31st 8t. N.W. HO. 9550 Arlington, Va. LAWRENCE RAGAN HUGH E. RILEY 3007 8. 12th 8t. CH. 2831 CARROL E. ROBB WO. 3456 DAVID H. SCHULL 4640 Brandywine 8t. NW. 2415 E 8t. N.W,, Apt. 208 DI. 1868 ‘W. GORDON WEBNER 4450 Reservoir Road N.W. WO. 1272 ~* * FARM BUREAU INSURANGE COMPANIES STATE OFFICE—SHERWOOD BLDG., BALTIMORE, MD: HOME OFFICE-COLUMBUS, OHIO od Neighbor Polcy | 2" 27 GOT A BIG FAMILY LIKE MINE? ORDER op 20.6 © TpsinTate F ROYAL CROWN 1923 N. Y. Ave. N.E, Washington, D, C. BOTTLING COMPANY Lincoln 8333 Make Yourself ComeTtable. For Summer . ... . Along with the lawn mower, garden rake and summer clothes, it is time to get your porch and garden furnished in tune with the weather. 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